| Literature DB >> 26344621 |
Benoît Levast1, Sunita Awate2, Lorne Babiuk3, George Mutwiri4,5, Volker Gerdts6,7, Sylvia van Drunen Littel-van den Hurk8,9.
Abstract
Adjuvants are crucial components of vaccines. They significantly improve vaccine efficacy by modulating, enhancing, or extending the immune response and at the same time reducing the amount of antigen needed. In contrast to previously licensed adjuvants, current successful adjuvant formulations often consist of several molecules, that when combined, act synergistically by activating a variety of immune mechanisms. These "combination adjuvants" are already registered with several vaccines, both in humans and animals, and novel combination adjuvants are in the pipeline. With improved knowledge of the type of immune responses needed to successfully induce disease protection by vaccination, combination adjuvants are particularly suited to not only enhance, but also direct the immune responses desired to be either Th1-, Th2- or Th17-biased. Indeed, in view of the variety of disease and population targets for vaccine development, a panel of adjuvants will be needed to address different disease targets and populations. Here, we will review well-known and new combination adjuvants already licensed or currently in development-including ISCOMs, liposomes, Adjuvant Systems Montanides, and triple adjuvant combinations-and summarize their performance in preclinical and clinical trials. Several of these combination adjuvants are promising having promoted improved and balanced immune responses.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvants; combinations; human clinical trials; review
Year: 2014 PMID: 26344621 PMCID: PMC4494260 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines2020297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Liposomes and TLR agonists: Clinical studies.
| Adjuvant | Phase | Vaccine antigen | Outcomes | References. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAF01 | I | No study results posted | ClinicalTrails.gov identifier NCT00922363 | |
| CAF01 | I | HIV peptide cocktail AFO-18 | Induction of T-cell responses in some of the vaccinees; no significant changes in viral load or CD4+ T cell counts | ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT01141205 [ |
| JVRS-100 adjuvant | I | Fluzone® | No study results posted | ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00662272 |
| JVRS-100 adjuvant | II | Fluzone® | No study results posted | ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00936468 |
ISCOMs and IC31®: Preclinical and clinical studies.
| Adjuvants | Phase | Subjects | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NY-ESO-1-ISCOMATRIX | II | Individuals with advanced melanoma | Study ongoing | ClinicalTrails.gov identifier NCT 00518206 |
| ISCOM and PANFLUVAC | I | Healthy Adults | Study ongoing | ClinicalTrails.gov identifier NCT00868218 |
| IC31®/Ag85B-ESAT-6 (TB vaccine) | Preclinical | Neonatal murine model | ↓ Bacterial growth, differentiation of CD4+ T cells into multifunctional Th1 and Th17 cells secreting IL-2, TNF-α and IFN-γ, antigen-specific DCs expressing co-stimulatory molecules CD80, CD86 and CD40 in the DLNs | [ |
| IC31®/Ag85B-ESAT-6 (TB vaccine) | Preclinical | Cynomolgus macaques | ↓ Clinical infections and prevents reactivation of latent infections | [ |
| IC31®/Ag85B-ESAT-6 (TB vaccine) | Preclinical | Cynomolgus macaques | ↓ Clinical infections and prevents reactivation of latent infections | [ |
| IC31®/Ag85B-ESAT-6 (TB vaccine) | I | Healthy mycobacterially naïve individuals | Potent and persistent antigen-specific IFN-γ+ T-cell responses, sustained for 2.5 years | [ |
| IC31®/Ag85B-ESAT-6 (TB vaccine) | I | Prior TB-infected individuals | Strong antigen-specific T-cell responses, sustained for 32 weeks | [ |
| IC31®/H1N1 (Influenza vaccine) | Preclinical | Young and aged mice | ↑ HI titers, IgG2a Abs and IFN-γ producing CD4+ T-cell responses, sustained for 200 days after a single dose vaccination | [ |
| IC31®/HSV-2 (Genital herpes vaccine) | Preclinical | Mice | High neutralizing HSV-specific Ab responses and splenic IFN-γ responses | [ |
Adjuvant system (AS): Clinical studies.
| Adjuvants | Phase | Subjects | Summary | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AS04/HPV-16/18 (CervarixTM) | III | Girls and women (10–75 years) | Ab responses in serum and cervicovaginal secretions up to 36 months | [ |
| III | >8,000 women (15–25 years) | Vaccine efficacy 92.9% against cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 and above (CIN2+) 34.9 months post vaccination and high vaccine efficacy against CIN2+ associated with 12 non-vaccine oncogenic strains (cross-protection) | [ | |
| IIIb | HIV-seronegative young African girls (10–25 years) | 100% seroprotection, which sustained up to 12-month post-vaccination, high neutralizing Abs and total IgG titers sustained for 8.4 years post-vaccination | [ | |
| IIIb | Young girls (9–15 years) | Co-administered HPV-16/18/AS04 with inactivated hepatitis A and B (HAB) or dTpa-IPV: immunogenicity was no inferior than any of the vaccine alone | [ | |
| AS04/HBV (Fendrix®) | Elderly, immunocompromised and renal insufficiency patients | Rapid and high seroprotection at 3 month (74%
| [ | |
| AS03 + Influenza A (H1N1 vaccine) | II and III | Volunteers (18–60 years), high-risk elderly (61–88 years) and children (3–9 years) | Higher seroconversion levels and 4-fold Ag-sparing effect compared to nonadjuvanted vaccine, ↑ H1N1 specific CD4+ T cells | [ |
| AS03 + Influenza A (H1N1 vaccine) | II | Children (6 months–12 years) | Higher immunogenicity compared to nonadjuvanated vaccines | [ |
| AS03 + H1N1 influenza pandemic vaccine 2009 | Multiple populations | Vaccine efficacy: 72%–97% | [ | |
| AS02+RTS,S (Malaria vaccine) | IIb | 131 semi-immune adults | Vaccine efficacy: 71% in 9 wks, strong Ab and T-cell responses to CSP | [ |
| IIb | 2,022 children (1–4 years) | Vaccine efficacy: 29.9% for first clinical episodes and 57.7% for severe malaria. Vaccine efficacy: 48.6% at 18 months for several malaria cases | [ | |
| AS02 + Mtb72F (TB vaccine) | I | Purified Protein Derivative (PPD)-negative adults (18–40 years) | ↑ Humoral and polyfunctional CD4+ T-cell responses expressing CD40L, IL-2, TNF-α and IFN-γ, sustained for 9 months and 1 year after primary and booster immunization, respectively | [ |
| AS02 + HBV | III | 450 healthy individuals Renal insufficiency patients; inprior HB vaccinated individuals | High seroprotection rates after first (75.9%) and second vaccine doses (99.7%) Seroprotection rate (76.9%) Seroprotection rates were 89.0% one month post-booster vaccination | [ |
| AS02 + MAGE-A3 | Advanced tumor patients, Lung cancer patients | Anti-MAGE-A3-specific Ab responses in 96% of the advanced tumor patients and 30% patients showed ↑ IFN-γ responses | [ | |
| AS01/RTS,S (malaria vaccine) | Preclinical | Rhesus monkeys | ↑ Ag-specific Ab and IFN-γ producing Th1-type responses | [ |
| AS01/MSP-1 (malaria vaccine) | IIa | 102 healthy human volunteers | Vaccine efficacy was higher (50%) compared to RTS,S/AS02A vaccine; ↑ CSP-specific IgG titers and polyfunctional CD4+ T cells expressing IL-2, IFN-γ, TNF-α, or CD40L | [ |
| AS01/M72 (TB vaccine) | I/II | 110 PPD-negative human volunteers | Vaccine specific Th1 CD4+ T-cell responses compared to M72/AS02 vaccine | [ |
| AS01/M72 (TB vaccine) | II | 540 children, aged 5–17 months | RTS,S/AS01E induced higher CD4+ T-cell responses as compared to RTS,S/AS02D | [ |
| AS01/F4 (HIV-1 vaccine) | I/II | 180 healthy volunteers (18–40 years) | High frequencies of polyfunctional CD4+ T-cell responses characterized by CD40L, IL-2 in combination with TNF-α and/or IFN-γ, which persisted for 44 days post-vaccination. | [ |